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This article focuses on the fixed-time pinning common synchronization and adaptive synchronization for quaternion-valued neural networks with time-varying delays. First, to reduce transmission burdens and limit convergence time, a pinning controller which only controls partial nodes directly rather than the entire nodes is proposed based on fixed-time control theory. Then, by Lyapunov function approach and some inequalities techniques, fixed-time common synchronization criterion is established. Second, further to realize the self-regulation function of pinning controller, an adaptive pinning controller which can adjust automatically the control gains is developed, the desired fixed-time adaptive synchronization is achieved for the considered system, and the corresponding criterion is also derived. Finally, the availability of these results is tested by simulation example.We investigate multiagent distributed online constrained convex optimization problems with feedback delays, where agents make sequential decisions before being aware of the cost and constraint functions. The main purpose of the distributed online constrained convex optimization problem is to cooperatively minimize the sum of time-varying local cost functions subject to time-varying coupled inequality constraints. The feedback information of the distributed online optimization problem is revealed to agents with time delays, which is common in practice. Every node in the system can interact with neighbors through a time-varying sequence of directed communication topologies, which is uniformly strongly connected. The distributed online primal-dual bandit push-sum algorithm that generates primal and dual variables with delayed feedback is used for the presented problem. Expected regret and expected constraint violation are proposed for measuring the performance of the algorithm, and both of them are shown to be sublinear with respect to the total iteration span T in this article. In the end, the optimization problem for the power grid is simulated to justify the proposed theoretical results.Causal discovery is continually being enriched with new algorithms for learning causal graphical probabilistic models. Each one of them requires a set of hyperparameters, creating a great number of combinations. Given that the true graph is unknown and the learning task is unsupervised, the challenge to a practitioner is how to tune these choices. We propose out-of-sample causal tuning (OCT) that aims to select an optimal combination. The method treats a causal model as a set of predictive models and uses out-of-sample protocols for supervised methods. This approach can handle general settings like latent confounders and nonlinear relationships. The method uses an information-theoretic approach to be able to generalize to mixed data types and a penalty for dense graphs to penalize for complexity. To evaluate OCT, we introduce a causal-based simulation method to create datasets that mimic the properties of real-world problems. We evaluate OCT against two other tuning approaches, based on stability and in-sample fitting. We show that OCT performs well in many experimental settings and it is an effective tuning method for causal discovery.Fine-grained image-text retrieval has been a hot research topic to bridge the vision and languages, and its main challenge is how to learn the semantic correspondence across different modalities. The existing methods mainly focus on learning the global semantic correspondence or intramodal relation correspondence in separate data representations, but which rarely consider the intermodal relation that interactively provide complementary hints for fine-grained semantic correlation learning. To address this issue, we propose a relation-aggregated cross-graph (RACG) model to explicitly learn the fine-grained semantic correspondence by aggregating both intramodal and intermodal relations, which can be well utilized to guide the feature correspondence learning process. More specifically, we first build semantic-embedded graph to explore both fine-grained objects and their relations of different media types, which aim not only to characterize the object appearance in each modality, but also to capture the intrinsic relation information to differentiate intramodal discrepancies. Then, a cross-graph relation encoder is newly designed to explore the intermodal relation across different modalities, which can mutually boost the cross-modal correlations to learn more precise intermodal dependencies. Besides, the feature reconstruction module and multihead similarity alignment are efficiently leveraged to optimize the node-level semantic correspondence, whereby the relation-aggregated cross-modal embeddings between image and text are discriminatively obtained to benefit various image-text retrieval tasks with high retrieval performance. Extensive experiments evaluated on benchmark datasets quantitatively and qualitatively verify the advantages of the proposed framework for fine-grained image-text retrieval and show its competitive performance with the state of the arts.The training of the standard broad learning system (BLS) concerns the optimization of its output weights via the minimization of both training mean square error (MSE) and a penalty term. However, it degrades the generalization capability and robustness of BLS when facing complex and noisy environments, especially when small perturbations or noise appear in input data. UC2288 p21 inhibitor Therefore, this work proposes a broad network based on localized stochastic sensitivity (BASS) algorithm to tackle the issue of noise or input perturbations from a local perturbation perspective. The localized stochastic sensitivity (LSS) prompts an increase in the network's noise robustness by considering unseen samples located within a Q -neighborhood of training samples, which enhances the generalization capability of BASS with respect to noisy and perturbed data. Then, three incremental learning algorithms are derived to update BASS quickly when new samples arrive or the network is deemed to be expanded, without retraining the entire model. Due to the inherent superiorities of the LSS, extensive experimental results on 13 benchmark datasets show that BASS yields better accuracies on various regression and classification problems. For instance, BASS uses fewer parameters (12.6 million) to yield 1% higher Top-1 accuracy in comparison to AlexNet (60 million) on the large-scale ImageNet (ILSVRC2012) dataset.Recent advances in the area of artificial intelligence and deep learning have motivated researchers to apply this knowledge to solve multipurpose applications in the area of computer vision and image processing. Super-resolution (SR), in the past few years, has produced remarkable results using deep learning methods. The ability of deep learning methods to learn the nonlinear mapping from low-resolution (LR) images to their corresponding high-resolution (HR) images leads to compelling results for SR in diverse areas of research. In this article, we propose a deep learning-based image SR architecture in the Tchebichef transform domain. This is achieved by integrating a transform layer into the proposed architecture through a customized Tchebichef convolutional layer (TCL). The role of TCL is to convert the LR image from the spatial domain to the orthogonal transform domain using Tchebichef basis functions. The inversion of the transform mentioned earlier is achieved using another layer known as the inverse TCL (ITCL), which converts back the LR images from the transform domain to the spatial domain. It has been observed that using the Tchebichef transform domain for the task of SR takes the advantage of high and low-frequency representation of images that makes the task of SR simplified. Furthermore, a transfer learning-based approach is adopted to enhance the quality of images by considering Covid19 medical images as an additional experiment. It is shown that our architecture enhances the quality of X-ray and CT images of COVID-19, providing a better image quality that may help in clinical diagnosis. Experimental results obtained using the proposed Tchebichef transform domain SR (TTDSR) architecture provides competitive results when compared with most of the deep learning methods employed using a fewer number of trainable parameters.This article aims to design a trend-oriented-granulation-based fuzzy C -means (FCM) algorithm that can cluster a group of time series at an abstract (granular) level. To achieve a better trend-oriented granulation of a time series, l1 trend filtering is firstly carried out to result in segments which are then optimized by the proposed segment merging algorithm. By constructing a linear fuzzy information granule (LFIG) on each segment, a granular time series which well reflects the linear trend characteristic of the original time series is produced. With the novel designed distance that can well measure the trend similarity of two LFIGs, the distance between two granular time series is calculated by the modified dynamic time warping (DTW) algorithm. Based on this distance, the LFIG-based FCM algorithm is developed for clustering time series. In this algorithm, cluster prototypes are iteratively updated by the specifically designed granule splitting and merging algorithm, which allows the lengths of prototypes to change in the process of iteration. This overcomes the serious drawback of the existing approaches, where the lengths of prototypes cannot be changed. Experimental studies demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed algorithm in clustering time series with different shapes or trends.The functional connectivity network (FCN) has been used to achieve several remarkable advancements in the diagnosis of neuro-degenerative disorders. Therefore, it is imperative to accurately estimate biologically meaningful FCNs. Several efforts have been dedicated to this purpose by encoding biological priors. However, owing to the high complexity of the human brain, the estimation of an 'ideal' FCN remains an open problem. To the best of our knowledge, almost all existing studies lack the integration of domain expert knowledge, which limits their performance. In this study, we focused on incorporating domain expert knowledge into the FCN estimation from a modularity perspective. To achieve this, we presented a human-guided modular representation (MR) FCN estimation framework. Specifically, we designed an adversarial low-rank constraint to describe the module structure of FCNs under the guidance of domain expert knowledge (i.e., a predefined participant index). The chronic tinnitus (TIN) identification task based on the estimated FCNs was conducted to examine the proposed MR methods. Remarkably, MR significantly outperformed the baseline and state-of-the-art(SOTA) methods, achieving an accuracy of 92.11%. Moreover, post-hoc analysis revealed that the FCNs estimated by the proposed MR could highlight more biologically meaningful connections, which is beneficial for exploring the underlying mechanisms of TIN and diagnosing early TIN.U.S. Commuting Zones (CZs) are an aggregation of county-level data that researchers commonly use to create less arbitrary spatial entities and to reduce spatial autocorrelation. However, by further aggregating data, researchers lose point data and the associated detail. Thus, the choice between using counties or CZs often remains subjective with insufficient empirical evidence guiding researchers in the choice. This article categorizes regional data as entrepreneurial, economic, social, demographic, or industrial and tests for the existence of local spatial autocorrelation in county and CZ data. We find CZs often reduce-but do not eliminate and can even increase-spatial autocorrelation for variables across categories. We then test the potential for regional variation in spatial autocorrelation with a series of maps and find variation based on the variable of interest. We conclude that the use of CZs does not eliminate the need to test for spatial autocorrection, but CZs may be useful for reducing spatial autocorrelation in many cases.

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